Developers and owner-occupants are racing to Astoria's Long Island City periphery, where converted factories and waterfront rezoning are pushing prices 18% higher year-over-year.
A waterfront redevelopment breaking ground near the historic market promises affordability at a critical moment when median rents in the borough have climbed 23% since 2020.
With institutional investors flooding the prestige rental sector, both property owners and affluent renters face unprecedented pressures that are redefining the traditional landlord-tenant relationship.
With new residential towers reshaping neighborhoods from Astoria to the Upper West Side, renters are seeing their first real relief in years—but the math still favors landlords.
New City Planning rules requiring 25% affordable units in private projects are forcing developers to rethink projects across Midtown and Upper West Side, with ripple effects already visible in sale prices and construction timelines.
New accessory dwelling unit regulations and commercial-to-residential conversion rules are triggering a strategic recalculation among high-end developers betting on the city's most exclusive neighborhoods.
As 15,000+ units hit the market across Queens' waterfront, renters face a rare window of negotiating power—but competition for neighborhoods remains fierce.
As Manhattan penthouses breach $5M and Brooklyn brownstones approach $2M, savvy investors are repositioning Long Island City as the next genuine opportunity zone.
With new projects from Astoria to Sunset Park reshaping the market, understanding what's actually breaking ground—and when—is the secret to finding your foothold.
Three major residential-commercial developments breaking ground this year are already redefining property valuations and neighborhood character in Queens' fastest-growing tech hub.
Rising rents across Brooklyn and Queens are forcing aspiring homeowners to delay purchases, while landlords face pressure that ripples through the entire property ecosystem.
As Manhattan prices plateau above $1.3 million and Brooklyn gentrification slows, savvy investors are reshaping Astoria's real estate landscape with new transit links and waterfront development.
As developers eye mixed-income projects along the East River, Astoria is becoming the rare NYC neighbourhood where affordability mandates and investment returns align.
As construction accelerates across Brooklyn and Queens, completed residential developments are finally showing the rental and resale yields that drew capital into the pipeline three years ago.